Please select your home edition
Edition
Pantaenius 2022 - SAIL LEADERBOARD - ROW

ISAF Nations Cup Grand Final - Australia and Japan locked

by ISAF on 10 Aug 2013
Brazil’s women breeze into the final at the 2013 ISAF Nations Cup Grand Final ISAF
At the ISAF Nations Cup Grand Final, semi-final saw a smooth ride for the Danish teams whilst Australia and Japan are locked at one-all.

Whilst Denmark took a big step towards the finals and underlined their status as favourites in both the Open and Women’s competitions of the ISAF Nations Cup in Middelfart, Australia and Japan were locked at one-all in their semi-final. Three points are needed to qualify for the final. Denmark’s men and women and Brazil’s women won both their semi-final races relatively easily.

A day of bright sunshine and stable but typically swinging eight to ten knot breezes on the beautiful Fænøsund, out of Middelfart Marina, ended in high drama in the Open with Australia, one-nil up, trying to execute a penalty turn just before the finish line and the arrival of Japan. They seemed to make it but the judges thought otherwise. The decision was they had not allowed their spinnaker down below the level of the gooseneck (where the boom joins the mast) before they turned head to wind.

For Japan it was a huge moment and the first time Wataru Sakamoto, the 32-year-old skipper from Wakayama, has beaten David Gilmour, the 22-year-old from Perth. 'We’ve met him three times I think in the last couple of years and never won a match before, so we’re stoked,' Sakamoto said.

Gilmour was less happy and a little confused as to why he had been having to make a penalty turn in the first place. He had managed to cancel out a penalty in the pre-start and take the initiative, but was penalised at the end of the first leg of the two-leg 20 minute match, for infringing on Japan as they headed for the turn.

'I’ll have to ask the judges why we were penalised,' Gilmour said. 'But we’re happy with how we went. We came from behind in the first race and the second one is only the first race we’ve lost in the DS37 boat, hopefully tomorrow we can continue our good form.'

Whilst Australia, like Denmark, had qualified for the semi finals by winning their round-robin group on Thursday, Japan had to come through a tough second stage on Friday morning, winning three of their five races.

Australia would have had two semi-finalists as Ashlen Rooklyn won the quarter-final stage, with four out of five victories, but the rule is that all nations at this event can only have one team qualify for the semi-final stage.

Sweden beat Japan in the last round of the second stage to qualify with them into the semi-finals. But there they ran into the Danish express, skippered by Nicolai Sehested, again, and were well beaten twice in the two semi-finals.

The day started unfortunately for Sweden’s skipper, Viktor Ogeman, as his tiller broke and he fell in the water in the pre-start of his first match of the day against Denmark, as they finished their group round robin. He went onto lose, the first of three defeats inflicted by Sehested on him on Friday. 'My crew came back for me, which was a good sign,' Ogeman joked. 'Nicolai was very sporting and didn’t attack. I made a couple of mistakes in the semi-finals and that cost us but we were ahead in the second race and I definitely think we can still win.'

Sehested disagrees. 'The breeze was up today and we’re fast in the DS37 when it’s like this, we’re confident,' he said.

The Women’s event has been raced in the smaller Match28 boats but Denmark’s skipper, Lotte Meldgaard, has looked only slightly less dominant.

The experienced 40-year-old Meldgaard and the 24-year-old Brazil skipper, Juliana Senfft had dominated the women’s round robin with ten and nine wins respectively out of their 12 matches. The trend continued in the semi-finals with Meldgaard wining both her first two matches against Norway’s Anne Marit Hansen comfortably.

Senfft, sixth in the last two Nations Cups, beat America’s Sandy Hayes, with similar ease. 'We have to win our semi-final first, but I think she (Lotte) will be favourite in the final,' Senftt said. 'We’ve sailed a lot against each other on the match racing circuit and been quite even, but she knows the boat better and has home advantage.'
Lloyd Stevenson - SYA3 728x90px BOTTOMRS Sailing 2021 - FOOTERBoat Books Australia FOOTER

Related Articles

44Cup Baiona Day 2
Switzerland's day in the sun History was made on the 44Cup today when, for the first time, a team representing land-locked Switzerland was top scoring boat of the day.
Posted today at 6:30 pm
49er & 49er FX Europeans & Nacra 17 Worlds Day 4
Uruguay surges to the top of the 49ers Uruguay has never qualified a 49er to the Olympic Games. In fact across the whole history of the modern Olympics the South American nation has just won 10 medals, none yet in sailing.
Posted today at 6:13 pm
Cup Spy May 9: Testing the wind machine
Luna Rossa have been testing the old and new AC75 wingfoils as they wind down in Cagliari Luna Rossa sailed for the fourth successive day from Cagliari, Sardinia. A point of interest on Thursday was the relative performance of its two wing foils - one to the new AC75 Class Rule, the other a legacy foil used in the 2021 America's Cup.
Posted today at 2:52 pm
Ambrogio Beccaria wins The Transat CIC in Class40
Crossing the line of the historic race at 03:47:55 hrs this morning Italy's Ambrogio Beccaria on his all Italian designed and built Musa 40 Alla Grande Pirelli added the hugely prestigious Transat CIC Class 40 title to his steadily growing collection of solo and short handed ocean racing honours this morning.
Posted today at 8:19 am
Marine Auctions: May Online Auctions
Bidding to open on Friday 24th May May 2024 Online Auction Bidding to Open Friday 24th May Close Thursday 30th May at 2pm AEST.
Posted today at 5:16 am
Is this the slipperiest AC75 boat in the fleet?
There's plenty to suggest American Magic's 'Patriot' is the most refined aerodynamic package so far There's plenty to suggest that American Magic's AC75 'Patriot' is the most refined aerodynamic package so far and if that's the case the team's new machine could be the lowest drag Cup boat out there.
Posted today at 5:11 am
The 5 Minute Warning
Andy Rice & Matt Sheahan's 5min racing update PlanetSail's Matt Sheahan catches up with Sailjuice's Andy Rice who's reporting from the South of France. Andy's at the last big regatta for the 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 classes before the Olympic Games just over a couple of months from now.
Posted on 9 May
44Cup Baiona Day 1
Strong start in light conditions From some way out the opening day of the 44Cup Baiona, the second event of the 2024 circuit for the high performance owner-driver RC44 one designs, was looking light.
Posted on 9 May
The Transat CIC Update
Ambrogio Beccaria has Class 40 finish line and victory 'in sight' With less than 140 miles to go to the finish line of the Transat CIC solo race across the North Atlantic from Lorient to New York Italy's Ambrogio Beccaria appears to have dealt with the last weather hurdle earlier today.
Posted on 9 May
49er & 49er FX Europeans & Nacra 17 Worlds Day 3
Lighter breeze launches young Germans up the FX rankings A drop in wind strength brought huge changes to the 49erFX leaderboard on day three of the European Championship in La Grande Motte in the South of France.
Posted on 9 May